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Samsung could revive variable aperture, the iPhone 18 Pro feature Galaxy had first

A rumor says variable aperture is back in testing after disappearing post-Galaxy S9.

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Samsung Galaxy Camera
Samsung

Samsung might be gearing up for a Samsung variable aperture camera comeback, and the irony is hard to miss. The feature first showed up on the Galaxy S9 and S9+, then Samsung dropped it years later, but Weibo tipster Digital Chat Station suggests it’s back on the table as Apple’s iPhone 18 Pro is rumored to get the same idea.

Nothing here is official, and the leak doesn’t pin the feature to a specific Galaxy model. Still, it’s the kind of camera hardware rumor that matters because it can change how your everyday photos look.

The Galaxy S9 trick, revisited

Variable aperture is a mechanical change inside the main camera. On the Galaxy S9 generation, Samsung could switch between f/1.5 for low light and f/2.4 for brighter scenes, trading light intake for sharper detail when conditions allow.

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If you want a quick refresher on why those numbers affect real photos, we reviewed the Galaxy S9 Plus camera.

Why the iPhone 18 matters

The buzz is getting framed as a response to Apple: reports have repeatedly tied variable aperture to the iPhone 18 Pro and iPhone 18 Pro Max, and the same Weibo tip claims Samsung is testing the feature again with that launch in mind.

That’s where the “copying” talk gets messy. Samsung already shipped variable aperture first, then chose to walk away from it. If Apple makes it a headline iPhone feature next, Samsung bringing it back later could look like a counterpunch, even if it’s technically a return to old territory.

What to watch next

Timing is the real tell. The rumor points away from the next Galaxy S26 cycle and leans toward a later Ultra release, potentially as far out as 2027, which makes this feel like exploratory testing instead of a near-term guarantee.

Two things will matter as this develops, whether multiple leakers converge on the same model name, and whether Samsung sticks to a simple two-step aperture like the S9 or expands the range. If you’re upgrade shopping, the practical move is to keep your decision anchored to phones you can buy now from the best camera phones out now.

Paulo Vargas
Paulo Vargas is an English major turned reporter turned technical writer, with a career that has always circled back to…
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